Ari LeVauxRestaurant Review: AmerAsia &amp; Sumo Sushi offer the best in bipolar dining<SPAN STYLE= "" >Restaurant Review: AmerAsia &amp; Sumo Sushi offer the best in bipolar dining</SPAN> by Ari LeVaux (2011-03-09)Restaurant Review: AmerAsia &amp; Sumo Sushi offer the best in bipolar diningYou say Confucius, I say Zen<div style="float:right; width:200px; height:195px; margin-left:8px; margin-bottom: 8px;"><img alt="Chinese dumplings" width="200" height="195" src="http://alibi.com/image/pix_id/28423/Chinese-dumplings.jpg?image_height=195&amp;image_width=200" /></div><P><SPAN STYLE= "" >Sometimes it freaks me out when Chinese restaurants serve sushi. Japanese food is light and neat, leaving nothing to chance. Prepared with short, meticulous strokes, sushi is the epitome of this culinary ethos. Meanwhile, Chinese food is created with broad, heavy, greasy strokes, unafraid of the chaos of a stir-fry. The two foods don&rsquo;t belong together, and it often seems like they only end up on menus that are cynically aimed at ignorant Americans who think all Asian food is the same. These are the kind of Chinese restaurants that serve dishes you hardly ever find in China, like General Tso&rsquo;s chicken. </span></p>...<br/>Full review: <A HREF="http://alibi.com/food/35992/Restaurant-Review-AmerAsia-Sumo-Sushi-offer-the.html"><SPAN STYLE= "" >Restaurant Review: AmerAsia &amp; Sumo Sushi offer the best in bipolar dining</SPAN></A>#type-0-106.648952632,35.0920059085800 Third Street NW
Albuquerque NM 87102